Deron Williams

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Deron Williams
Beşiktaş
20152017Dallas Mavericks
2017Cleveland Cavaliers
Career highlights and awards
Career NBA statistics
Points
13,804 (16.3 ppg)
Rebounds2,619 (3.1 rpg)
Assists6,819 (8.1 apg)
Stats Edit this at Wikidata at NBA.com
Stats at Basketball-Reference.com
Medals
Men's Basketball
Representing the  United States
Olympic Games
Gold medal – first place 2008 Beijing Team
Gold medal – first place 2012 London Team
FIBA Americas Championship
Gold medal – first place 2007 Las Vegas
FIBA Americas U18 Championship
Bronze medal – third place
2002 Isla Margarita
Team

Deron Michael Williams (

.

Early life and high school career

Williams was born in

US college sports recruiting information for high school athletes
Name Hometown High school / college Height Weight Commit date
Deron Williams
PG
The Colony, Texas The Colony (Texas) 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) 195 lb (88 kg) Sep 21, 2001 
Recruiting star ratings: Scout:4/5 stars   Rivals:4/5 stars   247SportsN/A
Overall recruiting rankings: Scout: 12 (PG)   Rivals: 8 (PG)
  • Note: In many cases, Scout, Rivals, 247Sports, and ESPN may conflict in their listings of height and weight.
  • In these cases, the average was taken. ESPN grades are on a 100-point scale.

Sources:

  • "2002 Illinois Basketball Commitment List". Rivals.com. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  • "2002 Illinois Basketball Commitment List". Scout.com. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  • "Scout.com Team Recruiting Rankings". Scout.com. Retrieved January 20, 2015.
  • "2002 Team Ranking". Rivals.com. Retrieved January 20, 2015.

College career

Williams was recruited to play

University of Illinois for the 2002–03 NCAA season by Bill Self. In his freshman year, he started 30 of 32 games and ranked third in the Big Ten Conference
in assists with 4.53 per game.

Bruce Weber assumed the head coach position for the Illini
in April 2003 and helped develop Williams throughout his remaining collegiate career. As a sophomore, Williams improved his scoring average from 6.3 to 14.0 points per game and improved his assists per game from the prior year to 6.17. Williams was a First-Team All-Big Ten selection by both the coaches and media.

In 2005, as a junior starting point guard, Williams led the

. That season saw the Illini go undefeated until the final game of the regular season when they lost to Ohio State by one point. Illinois's road to the Final Four was marked by a comeback win over the Arizona Wildcats, where the Illini, led by Williams, came back from fifteen points down in the final minutes to win the game. Williams made the game-tying three-point shot with just 38.5 seconds left in regulation. He then hit the go-ahead three-pointer in overtime, and the Illini never looked back in that game.

Williams received many awards after the 2004–05 season. Those honors include being named a consensus Second Team All American, as well as being named First Team All-Big Ten, Big Ten All-Tournament Team, and All-Final Four team and at the conclusion of the academic year, Williams was named as the

NCAA Tournament. Williams was named First-Team All-Big Ten as a sophomore in 2004 and as a junior in 2005, the year in which Williams, called by coach Bruce Weber "the MVP of the team", led the Illini to the Final Four. The team included four other future NBA players, including Dee Brown, Roger Powell, James Augustine, and Luther Head
.

Williams declared for the NBA draft after the 2005 season, forgoing his final year of collegiate eligibility.

NBA career

Utah Jazz (2005–2011)

2005–06 season

Williams after he was drafted by the Jazz in the 2005 NBA draft

Following the season, Williams declared for the 2005 NBA draft. The Utah Jazz selected Williams with the third overall selection, after Andrew Bogut and Marvin Williams. He started the season coming off the bench, eventually moved into the role of starting point guard, and was later sent back to the bench. Williams finished his rookie season averaging 10.8 points and 4.5 assists per game, in 80 games played. Williams was rewarded by being named to the NBA All-Rookie First Team,[8] as well as being the only other rookie besides Chris Paul to receive a first-place vote in the 2005–06 NBA Rookie of the Year voting (Williams received one first-place vote, from Jazz color commentator Ron Boone). Williams and Chris Paul have shared a friendly[9] rivalry[10] that began after the 2005 NBA draft, where Williams and Paul were the third and fourth selections overall. Whether Williams or Paul was the superior point guard is the subject of frequent debate[9][11][12][13][14] among sports writers and fans.

2006–07 season

Williams began the

Northwest Division
title.

The

playoffs ended a three-year playoff drought for the Jazz, and in the first round, they faced the Houston Rockets. Williams scored in double figures in each of the seven games in the series, including a 14 assist, 20 point double-double on May 5 to close out the series. The Jazz won the series 4–3, beating the Rockets in Houston to complete the series. It was their first playoff series victory since 2000.[16]

In the second round, Williams and the Jazz faced the Golden State Warriors, the eighth-seeded team that had upset the top-seeded Dallas Mavericks 4–2 in the first round. Williams started off the series strong, posting double-doubles in two of the first four games as the Jazz jumped out to a 3–1 series lead. In the fifth game, Williams was plagued by foul problems and struggled from the floor, hitting only one of eleven shots from the field and scoring just two points.[17] However, despite Williams's poor performance, the Jazz posted a 100–87 victory, sending the Jazz to the Western Conference Finals for the first time since 1998 and the John Stockton and Karl Malone era.

The Jazz faced the eventual NBA Champion San Antonio Spurs in the conference finals, a team led by Tim Duncan who had posted three NBA championships since 1999. Williams played his best basketball of the season in the first three games, averaging nine assists and over thirty points over that span.[18] Spurs guard Tony Parker recognized Williams's effort after the Jazz won game three 109–83.

He played good tonight. He was very aggressive from the beginning of the game. His outside shot was going and he was aggressive in getting everyone involved.[19]

Spurs forward Bruce Bowen also highlighted Williams's skills, as he compared Williams to the previous Jazz All-Star guard John Stockton.

That's what's missing today in the NBA is solid point guards. You have the scoring guards, you have guards that can't do some things. With him, it's special because he spent that time in college and learned more and more about the game of basketball. So he goes to a team that really needs a great point guard and he just fits the mold of a young Stockton.[20]

2007–08 season

Williams with Utah Jazz in 2008

Williams scored a then-career high 41 points on December 8, 2007, in a game against the

All-Star weekend.[25]

Much was made of Williams's new leadership role on the team, and how he calls the majority of the plays on the team instead of coach Jerry Sloan, something not even John Stockton did.[26] In March, Williams recorded 212 assists, the most by any NBA player in any month since John Stockton in January 1992.[27] The Jazz again won the Northwest Division and the four seed, this time with a 54–28 record, and again faced a Houston Rockets team that had home-court advantage in the first round. However, the Jazz won the first two games in Houston and went on to win the series in six games.[28] In the second round, the Jazz lost to the Los Angeles Lakers in six games.[29] Williams was the leading scorer for the Jazz in the 2008 playoffs.[30]

2008–09 season

Williams with the Jazz attempting to block Chauncey Billups

Williams missed thirteen of the first fifteen games of the season due to a second-degree ankle sprain sustained in the preseason against the Chicago Bulls.

Andrei Kirilenko), but despite averaging 19.2 ppg and 10.0 apg through the All-Star Break, he was again snubbed from the All-Star Game. Similar to the previous year, he responded to the snub with strong play, scoring 30+ points in five consecutive games before the break (he missed one additional game during this time due to a minor injury) and leading the team to a 5–2 record to close out the first half of the season, including a win over the league-leading Los Angeles Lakers to snap their seven-game winning streak. They followed the All-Star Break with a win against the defending champion Boston Celtics
.

On March 1, 2009, Williams became the second active player after Steve Nash to reach 20 or more assists in at least four games in their career.

2009–10 season

On December 14, 2009, Williams was named the Western Conference Player of the Week. A week after his teammate and pick and roll partner Carlos Boozer, was named The Western Conference Player of the Week. The Jazz hadn't had consecutive Western Conference Player of the Week Awards since 1997, when Karl Malone won it back to back.

On January 28, 2010, Williams was named to participate in the 2010 NBA All-Star Game at Cowboy Stadium in Arlington, Texas. This marked his All-Star debut. He was also invited to participate in the NBA Skills Challenge, where he finished second to Steve Nash.

Despite playing with injuries to his wrist and ankle, and playing without starters

Andrei Kirilenko and Mehmet Okur, Williams became just the second player in Utah Jazz history to record at least 30 points and 10 or more assists in a playoff game. John Stockton is the only other Jazz player to accomplish said feat, doing so twice in his career. Williams scored 33 points on 7–14 shooting from the field while making 16–18 free throws from the line, while also contributing 14 assists on the road in a game 2 win against the Denver Nuggets.[32]
He repeated that feat later in series while scoring 34 points and dishing out 10 assists.

On April 28, Williams became the first player in NBA history to record at least 20 points and 10 or more assists in five straight games in a playoff series. Williams points/assists through the first five games, in order, were 26/11, 33/14, 24/10, 24/13, and 34/10.[33][34]

2010–11 season

After Sloan resigned mid-season on February 7, 2011, he denied reports that conflicts with Williams forced him to leave. "I forced myself out", Sloan responded.[35] Williams acknowledged he had a disagreement with Sloan during the previous night's game, but he added, "I would never force coach Sloan out of Utah. He's meant more to this town, more to this organization than I have by far. I would have asked out of Utah first."[36][37]

New Jersey Nets (2011)

On February 23, 2011, Williams was traded to the

New Jersey Nets for guard Devin Harris, forward Derrick Favors, two first round draft picks, and $3 million in cash.[38][39] While Williams was under contract through 2011–12 with a player option worth $17.7 million for 2012–13, Jazz chief executive officer Greg Miller did not believe the team could re-sign Williams. "And while I never saw any indication that he wouldn't re-sign with us, I never saw any indication he would", said Miller.[39][40]

Williams's acquisition gave the Nets a proven NBA star to build around as the team was preparing to make the transition to their new home in Brooklyn. Williams's impact on the Nets was immediately apparent, although he played in just 12 games due to a nagging wrist injury. As a team, the Nets were one of highest scoring teams post all-star break and big men Brook Lopez and Kris Humphries both saw their scoring numbers increase as Williams averaged 12.8 APG during those 12 games.[41] His 47 assists were an NBA record for a player in his first 3 games with a new team and no Net before him recorded double-doubles in their first 5 games with the team.[42] On April 11, 2011, Williams had wrist surgery on his right wrist which ended his season, although he was initially hesitant to having it. "I was angry and tried to tell the doctors that I didn't want to have the surgery", Williams said. "The two doctors had me outvoted, two against one. I couldn't do anything about it. They told me that there was no reason to postpone it and if I didn't have it, I would be dealing with the same pain again."[43]

Beşiktaş (2011)

During the

FIBA in order to play elsewhere.[45][47]

On November 22, 2011, Williams scored 50 points against

Zorg en Zekerheid Leiden on November 29, 2011. Williams played a total of 15 games in Turkey.[49]

Return to New Jersey / Brooklyn (2011–2015)

2011–12 season

After the lockout ended, Williams returned to New Jersey, hoping to lead the Nets to the playoffs for the first time since 2007. The Nets caught a bad break in the preseason, though, as Brook Lopez suffered a broken foot that caused him to miss more than 2 months. After winning their opening game at Washington, the Nets went on to lose their next six, putting them in an early hole in the standings in an abbreviated season. The Nets continued to struggle without Lopez, but Williams played well enough to be voted into the All-Star Game for the third time in his career, as he averaged over 22 points and 8 assists at the break.

When Lopez returned after the All-Star break, the Nets began to pick up their play. On March 4, 2012, Williams scored a career-high and NBA Nets franchise-high 57 points against the

Charlotte Bobcats. He broke the previous team record of 52 points held by Mike Newlin and Ray Williams. It was the most points scored in the NBA that season and the second-most points scored against the Bobcats by one player in a single game, second to Kobe Bryant.[50]
Lopez went down again with a sprained ankle and was out for several more weeks.

Williams remained optimistic that he would resign with the Nets, but was noncommittal as he said he wanted to keep his options open and become a free agent at the end of the season.[citation needed] Williams reiterated this stance on March 16 after the Nets failed to land All-Star center Dwight Howard at the trade deadline.[51]

2012–13 season

Williams celebrates a made three-pointer

On July 11, 2012, Williams signed a five-year, $98.7 million deal to remain with the Nets, who had completed their move to Brooklyn. He was encouraged to stay with the Nets after GM Billy King completed a trade with the Atlanta Hawks for six-time All-Star Joe Johnson, as well as re-signing young big man Brook Lopez and defensive player Gerald Wallace. Williams scored the first regular-season points at the new Barclays Center on November 3, 2012, against the Toronto Raptors. The Nets won the game 107-100 as Williams finished the game with 19 points and 9 assists.[52] On November 26, 2012, the Nets played their crosstown rival, the New York Knicks, at the Barclays Center. The game was scheduled to be played on November 1, 2012, and be the first game of the season for the Knicks and the Nets. The game was postponed due to weather in the New York City area involving Hurricane Sandy.[53] The Nets beat the Knicks 96–89 in overtime, with Williams contributing 16 points and 14 assists.[54] On December 27, 2012, the Nets fired head coach Avery Johnson after a 14 win, 14 loss start. Rumors circulated that Williams might have been involved in the firing, but Williams denied playing a role and said he was surprised Johnson was fired.[55]

Williams announced that he would miss the final two games before the All-Star break to receive a cortisone shot in both of his ankles and platelet-rich plasma treatment in his ankles. His problems stemmed from a bone spur that was causing inflammation in the ankle.[56]

On March 8, 2013, the Nets were playing the Washington Wizards as Williams hit 11 three-pointers in a single game, setting a Nets record. He hit 9 of the 11 threes in the first half, which was an NBA record for three-pointers in a half. Williams finished the night with 42 points in a Nets win.[57]

2013–14 season

On March 28, 2014, Williams recorded his 21st consecutive game with at least one steal, tying the Hawks' Paul Millsap with the longest such streak in the league in 2013–14.[58] Two days later, Williams recorded a steal for the 22nd straight game, marking the longest streak in the 2013–14 season.[59] On April 4, 2014, Williams recorded his 25th straight game with at least one steal, one short of the Nets' franchise record held by Jason Kidd and Mookie Blaylock.[60] The next day, he tied the Nets' franchise record with a steal against the 76ers.[61] He broke the record the next game with two steals against the Miami Heat on April 8.[62] The streak ended at 31 on April 22 after he failed to record a steal in Game 2 of their first-round playoff matchup against the Toronto Raptors.[63]

2014–15 season

After leading the Nets to a 4–2 record to start the 2014–15 season, Williams was named Eastern Conference Player of the Week for games played Monday, November 3 through Sunday, November 9. The award marked his first Player of the Week honor as a Net, having previously won the award three times during his tenure with the Jazz, and his first since the week of November 8–14, 2010.[64] Despite a good start to the season injury-wise for Williams, he went down on December 19 in the 91–95 loss to the Cleveland Cavaliers, limping off the court in the second quarter with a strained right calf and did not return.[65] He subsequently missed the following two games, only to return on December 26 against Boston coming off the bench for the first time this season, losing his starting spot in favor of Jarrett Jack.[66] He was later ruled out indefinitely on January 8 with a fractured rib that he suffered on January 4 against Miami.[67] After an 11-game absence due to the injury, Williams returned to action on February 2 against the Los Angeles Clippers, recording 15 points and 3 assists off the bench in the 102–100 win.[68]

On February 20 against the Los Angeles Lakers, Williams regained his starting spot from Jack after 13 straight games coming off the bench. He subsequently recorded 12 points and a season-high 15 assists in the 114–105 win.[69] On April 3, 2015, he scored a season-high 31 points in a 114–109 win over the Toronto Raptors.[70]

In Game 4 of the Nets' first-round playoff series against the Atlanta Hawks on April 27, Williams scored a playoff career-high 35 points in a 120–115 overtime win to tie the series at 2-2.[71] The Nets went on to lose the series in six games.

On July 11, 2015, Williams was waived by the Nets.[72] He received a buyout from the final two seasons of his contract with the Nets.[73]

Dallas Mavericks (2015–2017)

Williams brings the ball up in a 2017 game against the Phoenix Suns

On July 14, 2015, Williams signed with the Dallas Mavericks.[74] He made his debut for the Mavericks in the team's season opener against the Phoenix Suns on October 28, recording 12 points and 7 assists in a 111–95 win.[75] On December 1, he scored a then season-high 30 points in a 115–112 overtime win over the Portland Trail Blazers.[76] He missed the team's last four games of December with a left hamstring, returning to action on January 1 against the Miami Heat. He played in 20 minutes off the bench against the Heat, finishing with nine points and five assists.[77] On January 5, he scored 25 points and hit the game-winning three-pointer in double overtime against the Sacramento Kings.[78] On March 20, he recorded season highs of 31 points and 16 assists in a 132–120 overtime win over the Portland Trail Blazers, becoming the first Maverick with 30 points and 15 assists in the same game since Jason Kidd did so in 1996.[79] Between late March and early April, Williams missed eight games with a left abdominal strain.[80] The abdominal strain resurfaced for Williams in Game 4 of the Mavericks' first-round playoff series against the Oklahoma City Thunder, ruling him out for the rest of the game after just 89 seconds and later ruled him out for the rest of the season.[81] On July 8, 2016, Williams re-signed with the Mavericks.[82] In the Mavericks' season opener on October 26, 2016, Williams scored a team-high 25 points in a 130–121 overtime loss to the Indiana Pacers.[83] On December 3, he had a season-high 15 assists in a 107–82 win over the Chicago Bulls.[84] Two days later, he had his first double-double of the season with 15 points and 13 assists in a 109–101 loss to the Charlotte Hornets.[85] With seven assists on December 18 against the Sacramento Kings, Williams passed Derek Harper for 21st place on the NBA's all-time assists list with 6,584.[86] On January 22, 2017, he had eight assists against the Los Angeles Lakers and moved into 20th place in NBA history with 6,715 assists, passing Kevin Johnson.[87] On February 11, 2017, against Orlando, Williams returned after missing eight games with a sprained right big toe, getting seven points and four assists in 16 minutes in the first half before sitting out the second half on a minutes restriction.[88] On February 23, 2017, Williams was waived by the Mavericks.[89]

Cleveland Cavaliers (2017)

On February 27, 2017, Williams signed with the Cleveland Cavaliers.[90] In his debut for the Cavaliers two days later, Williams scored four points in 24 minutes off the bench in a 103–99 loss to the Boston Celtics.[91] On April 10, 2017, he had a season-high 35 points, nine assists and seven rebounds in a 124–121 overtime loss to the Miami Heat.[92]

Williams appeared in all 18 playoff games for Cleveland as the backup point guard to Kyrie Irving, en route to the NBA Finals, where they were defeated by the Golden State Warriors.

National team career

Williams with the United States Olympic team in 2012
Williams and future Cavs teammate LeBron James meeting President Barack Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama

Williams won a bronze medal as a member of the United States U18 team at the

Redeem Team" moniker after missing out in the 2004 Summer Olympics.[94] In 8 games in the 2008 Olympics, Williams averaged 8.0 points per game with 2.8 assists. Williams was one of three-point guards on the national team, alongside Chris Paul and Jason Kidd.[95]

In January 2012, Williams made the 19 man roster of the USA men's basketball team for the 2012 Summer Olympics.[96] He ultimately made the final roster. The team won the gold medal by beating Spain for the second consecutive Olympics with a score of 107–100. During the Olympics, Williams averaged 9.0 points per game with 4.6 assists as he collected his second Olympic gold medal.[97]

Career statistics

NBA statistics

Legend
  GP Games played   GS  Games started  MPG  Minutes per game
 FG%  Field goal percentage  3P%  3-point field goal percentage  FT%  Free throw percentage
 RPG  Rebounds per game  APG  Assists per game  SPG  Steals per game
 BPG  Blocks per game  PPG  Points per game  Bold  Career high
 *  Led the league

Regular season

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2005–06 Utah 80 47 28.8 .421 .416 .704 2.4 4.5 .8 .2 10.8
2006–07 Utah 80 80 36.9 .456 .322 .767 3.3 9.3 1.0 .2 16.2
2007–08 Utah 82* 82* 37.3 .507 .395 .803 3.0 10.5 1.1 .3 18.8
2008–09 Utah 68 68 36.8 .471 .310 .849 2.9 10.7 1.1 .3 19.4
2009–10 Utah 76 76 36.9 .469 .371 .801 4.0 10.5 1.3 .2 18.7
2010–11 Utah 53 53 37.9 .458 .345 .853 3.9 9.7 1.2 .2 21.3
New Jersey 12 12 38.0 .349 .271 .793 4.6 12.8 1.3 .3 15.0
2011–12 New Jersey 55 55 36.3 .407 .336 .843 3.3 8.7 1.2 .4 21.0
2012–13 Brooklyn 78 78 36.4 .440 .378 .859 3.0 7.7 1.0 .4 18.9
2013–14 Brooklyn 64 58 32.2 .450 .366 .801 2.6 6.1 1.5 .2 14.3
2014–15 Brooklyn 68 55 31.1 .387 .386 .834 3.5 6.6 .9 .3 13.0
2015–16 Dallas 65 63 32.4 .414 .344 .869 2.9 5.8 .9 .2 14.1
2016–17 Dallas 40 40 29.3 .430 .348 .821 2.6 6.9 .6 .1 13.1
Cleveland 20 4 20.3 .463 .415 .840 1.9 3.6 .3 .3 7.5
Career 845 771 34.2 .445 .357 .822 3.1 8.1 1.0 .2 16.3
All-Star 3 0 21.3 .552 .500 .000 2.3 5.7 2.0 .7 13.0

Playoffs

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2007
Utah 17 17 38.6 .452 .333 .790 4.3 8.6 1.5 .2 19.2
2008
Utah 12 12 42.8 .492 .500 .773 3.6 10.0 .6 .3 21.6
2009
Utah 5 5 42.2 .414 .360 .829 3.8 10.8 1.8 .4 20.2
2010
Utah 10 10 39.8 .450 .392 .802 2.7 10.2 1.0 .4 24.3
2013
Brooklyn 7 7 41.7 .425 .395 .822 3.1 8.4 1.0 .6 20.6
2014
Brooklyn 12 12 35.7 .395 .340 .800 3.2 5.8 1.1 .2 14.5
2015
Brooklyn 6 6 32.0 .391 .423 .857 6.2 5.5 1.3 .0 11.8
2016
Dallas 3 3 16.3 .333 .429 .000 .7 2.7 .3 .0 5.0
2017
Cleveland 18 0 14.6 .438 .387 .909 1.3 2.1 .6 .1 4.3
Career 90 72 33.4 .438 .393 .801 3.2 7.0 1.0 .2 15.7

College statistics

Year Team GP GS MPG FG% 3P% FT% RPG APG SPG BPG PPG
2002–03 Illinois 32 30 27.1 .426 .354 .533 3.0 4.5 1.4 .2 6.3
2003–04 Illinois 30 29 33.9 .408 .394 .787 3.2 6.2 1.0 .3 14.0
2004–05 Illinois 39 39 33.7 .433 .364 .677 3.6 6.8 1.0 .2 12.5
Career 101 98 31.7 .422 .374 .685 3.3 5.9 1.1 .2 11.0

Personal life

Williams was baptized as a Christian in early 2010.[98] He married Amy Young, whom he had known since second grade and had dated since high school, and has four children.[99]

Williams appeared as himself on the Disney Channel show The Suite Life on Deck during the season 3 episode Twister: Part 1 along with Dwight Howard and Kevin Love.[100]

An avid

Jake Paul vs. Tommy Fury fight.[101] On November 9, 2021, his opponent was revealed to be Frank Gore.[102]

Exhibition boxing record

1 fight 1 win 0 losses
By decision 1 0
No. Result Record Opponent Type Round, time Date Location Notes
1 Win 1–0 United States Frank Gore SD 4 Dec 18, 2021 United States Amalie Arena, Tampa, Florida, U.S.

Endorsements

Williams was the cover athlete for the video game

MetroPCS; he acquired many of the deals during his successful time with the Utah Jazz.[104] Since joining the Nets, Williams has starred in commercials for Red Bull and MetroPCS.[105][106]

See also

References

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  5. ^ 1997 Texas State Wrestling Champions Archived November 23, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
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  7. ^ SLAM ONLINE | » Deron Williams: Giant Steps Archived June 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  8. ^ "Paul headlines All-Rookie Team as lone unanimous pick". ESPN.com. May 4, 2006. Retrieved December 26, 2021.
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  20. ^ Lewis, Michael C. (May 23, 2007). "Salt Lake Tribune – JAZZ NOTES: Williams's fan club growing". Sltrib.com.
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  31. ^ Deron Williams out at least 2 weeks Archived October 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
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External links